| Literature DB >> 20226073 |
Abstract
Scientific history has had a profound effect on the theories of evolution. At the beginning of the 21st century, molecular cell biology has revealed a dense structure of information-processing networks that use the genome as an interactive read-write (RW) memory system rather than an organism blueprint. Genome sequencing has documented the importance of mobile DNA activities and major genome restructuring events at key junctures in evolution: exon shuffling, changes in cis-regulatory sites, horizontal transfer, cell fusions and whole genome doublings (WGDs). The natural genetic engineering functions that mediate genome restructuring are activated by multiple stimuli, in particular by events similar to those found in the DNA record: microbial infection and interspecific hybridization leading to the formation of allotetraploids. These molecular genetic discoveries, plus a consideration of how mobile DNA rearrangements increase the efficiency of generating functional genomic novelties, make it possible to formulate a 21st century view of interactive evolutionary processes. This view integrates contemporary knowledge of the molecular basis of genetic change, major genome events in evolution, and stimuli that activate DNA restructuring with classical cytogenetic understanding about the role of hybridization in species diversification.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20226073 PMCID: PMC2836002 DOI: 10.1186/1759-8753-1-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mob DNA
Modes of intercellular and interkingdom DNA transfer.
| Horizontal transfer mode | Documented transfers |
|---|---|
| Uptake of environmental DNA | Bacteria -- bacteria [ |
| Plant -- bacteria [ | |
| Plastid transfection [ | |
| Mammalian cell transfection [ | |
| Conjugal transfer | Bacteria -- bacteria [ |
| Bacteria -- yeast [ | |
| Bacteria -- plant [ | |
| Viral transduction and gene transfer agents | Bacteria -- bacteria [ |
| Bacteria -- plant [ | |
| Animal cell -- animal cell [ | |
| Animal cell -- virus [ | |
| Parasitic or endosymbiotic association | Plant -- fern [ |
| Plant -- plant [ | |
| Bacteria -- invertebrate [ | |
| Undetermined mechanism | Archaea -- bacteria [ |
Plastid genome sizes in photosynthetic organisms and their non-photosynthetic relatives [108].
| Angiosperms | Plastid genome size (No. coding sequences) |
|---|---|
| 155.9 kb (146) | |
| 154 kb | |
| 135 kb | |
| 70.0 kb (53) | |
| 150.6 kb (209) | |
| 37.5 kb (54) | |
| 54.1 kb | |
| 143.2 kb (128) | |
| 73.3 kb (84) | |
| 119.7 kb (175) | |
| 34.7 kb (68) | |
| 35.0 kb (65) | |
| 34.8 kb (65) | |
| 39.6 kb (71) | |
Genomic responses to changes in ploidy and interspecific hybridization in plants.
| Taxon | Genomic response |
|---|---|
| Genome expansion and retrotransposon proliferation in sunflower hybrids [ | |
| Chromosomal repatterning and the evolution of sterility barriers in hybrid sunflower species [ | |
| Rapid chromosome evolution in polyploids [ | |
| Grasses | Altered methylation patterns and chromosome restructuring in hybrids [ |
| Potato | Genome instability in hybrids [ |
| Phenotypic and epigenetic variability in a diploid hybrid [ | |
| Elimination of repeated DNA in a synthetic allotetraploid [ | |
| Rice | Extensive genomic variability induced by introgression from wild rice [ |
| LTR retrotransposon movements in rice lines introgressed by wild rice [ | |
| Retrotransposon activation following introgression [ | |
| Rapid genome change in synthetic polyploids [ | |
| Large scale chromosome restructuring [ | |
| Wheat [ | Sequence loss and cytosine methylation following hybridization and allopolyploidy [ |
| Rapid genome evolution following allopolyploidy [ | |
| Changes in methylation patterns of mobile elements in allopolyploids [ | |
| Parental repeat elimination in newly synthesized allopolyploids [ | |
| Rapid genomic changes in interspecific and intergeneric hybrids and allopolyploids [ | |
| Genomic changes in synthetic polyploids [ | |
| Chromosome rearrangements after allotetraploid formation [ | |
Genomic responses to hybridization in animals.
| Taxon | Genomic Response |
|---|---|
| Increased retrotransposition in interspecific hybrid [ | |
| Centromere instability in interspecific hybrids [ | |
| Wallabies | Loss of retroelement methylation and chromosome remodelling in interspefic hybrids [ |
| Mouse | Amplification and double minutes in a hybrid [ |
| Rice fish ( | Chromosome elimination in an interspecific hybrid [ |